Transforming services for children without parents:
description
Transcript of Transforming services for children without parents:
Transforming services for children without parents:
A decade of EU Daphne projects in collaboration with the WHO Regional Office for Europe
Professor Kevin Browne, Institute of Work, Health & Organisations (I-WHO),
School of Community Health Sciences
Email: [email protected];
Definition of an institution or residential care home for children (‘Children’s Home’)
• Group living for more than 10 children, without parents or surrogate parents (for more than 3 months – ie: not a boarding school, hospital or emergency care).
• Care is provided by a small number of paid adult carers (European average is 1 day staff to 6 children of a similar age).
• Organised, routine and impersonal structure to living arrangements
• professional relationship, rather than parental relationship, between the adults and children.
European survey on young children in institutional care resulted in national surveysBrowne, K.D., Hamilton-Giacritsis, C.E., Johnson, R., Ostergren, Leth, I., M Agathonos, H., Anaut, M., Herczog,
M., Keller-Hamela, M., Klimakova, A., Stan, V., Zeytinoglu, S. (2005). Adoption and Fostering, 29 (4): 1-12.
Proportion of all children under 3 years who are in institutional care per 10,000 (blue lines are estimates).
Extent of Institutional Care of Infants and toddlers and the ‘orphanage’ myth
• UNICEF estimate 44,000 young children under 3 in Eastern Europe and Central Asian ‘Children’s Homes’.
• Our EU survey of member states and accession countries showed 23,000 young children under 3 without a parent in institutional care (for more than 3 months).
• ‘infant homes’ often provide a non stimulating clinical environment for toddlers and young children up to 4 years of age.
• Vast majority (94 to 96%) of children in ‘orphanages’ have at least one living parent, often known to the authorities
Reasons for institutionalisation in 2003
Placement decisions often occur without family work or support
Keep balance betweenchild protection andfamily preservation
The UN guidelines are taken in part from the work of the team from 2002 to 2009, supported by the European Union Daphne Programme and World Health Organisation (see Reports to the UN General Assembly below):
Infants my be imprisoned behind their cot bars for up to 18 hours a day
Nurses/care workers are preoccupied with meeting the physical/health needs of the child and have little time for social interaction
Effect of Institutional Care on the Infant Brain Growth
EEG Recordings from a Young Child in a Romanian Institution (Nelson et al 2005)
EEG Activity Across Regions of the Child’s Brain (Bucharest Early Intervention Project - Nelson and Koga, 2004)
Evidence from Brain Scans 2
The dangers of institutional careJohnson, R., Browne, K., Hamilton-Giachritsis, C. (2006). Young Children in Institutional Care at
Risk of Harm: A Review. Trauma, Violence and Abuse, 7 (1):34-60. Sage.
• Young children who are institutionalised before 6 months suffer long term developmental delay.
• Those who are placed in a caring family environment by the age of 6 months catch up on their physical and cognitive development (average length of stay ranges betw. 11 and 15 months).
• Improvements are seen in cognitive ability when children are removed from institutional care at an any age and placed in a family.
• Difficulties with social behaviour and attachments may persist, leading to a greater chance of antisocial behaviour, delinquency and mental health problems.
• it is recommended that children less than 3 years, with or without disability, should not be placed in residential care without a parent or primary caregiver
The danger of institutions for young children has been known for 50 years
Both Bowlby (UK) and Vygotsky (Russia) have emphasised the following:
• (a) infants need one to one interaction with sensitive and caring parent figure to which they develop a secure attachment.
• (b) the negative consequences of children growing up in an institution with attachment disorders and later antisocial acts
CHDCHD
Effects on physical development
Parental responses to attachment behaviour determine the security of attachment and the child’s willingness to explore and learn.
(Bowlby, 1969; Ainsworth, 1978).
The biological mother is not essential just a caring & sensitive adult (one to one) Rutter, 1972
Parents consistent comfort responses to crying promotes trust and security (Maccoby, 1990)
SensitivityAcceptanceCo-operationAvailability
Children in institutional care receive inconsistent or little response to crying and attachment behaviour
Children learn not to cry and that other children (usually of the same age) are rivals for attention
Institutionalised children give up on social behaviour and withdraw into themselves (pseudo-autisum)
A child in residential care bound up to prevent self harm (Serbia, 2007)
Long term consequences of anti-social & violent behaviour
Source: Widom, C.S. (1998) Childhood Victimization: Early adversity and subsequent psychopathology. In Dohrenwend, B.P. (Ed.) Adversity, stress, and psychopathology. (Pp. 81-95) NY: Oxford Univ. Press.
Perc
ent
Protection/Out of Home Placements
Institution ??
No child under 3 should be in institutional care
International Adoption
Last resort
Only in the best interests of the child
Institutional CareCare in CommunityFamily Support with Day care/therapeutic interventions
Care by Non-offending parent (in the absence of the offender)
Kinship Care (grandparent/other relative)
Foster / therapeutic foster home
National Adoption - Only 4% are true orphans!
Transforming of children’s services
COMMUNITY SERVICES
FOSTER CARE
RESIDENTIAL CARE
Pyramid of services to children and families: There are pitfalls in attempting to reduce residential care
Framework for the assessment of children and families (Department of Health, 2000)
Child Safeguarding & Promoting
Welfare
Manual on the Better Care Network: Mulheir, G., Browne, K. and Associates (2007). De-Institutionalising And Transforming Children’s
Services: A Guide To Good Practice.
Relative costs of institutional care
• Analyses of institutional care in Romania, Slovakia, Ukraine, Moldova and Russia by Browne et al. (2005) and Carter (2005)– 6 times more expensive than social services for
vulnerable families or voluntary kinship care, – 3 times more expensive than foster care, – 2 times more expensive than small group homes
• 33% to 50% of paid institutional staff have NO direct contact with children
• Savings for children with disabilities is 66% of savings for children without disabilities.
STEPS TO DE-INSTITUTIONALISATION (Mulheir and Browne, 2007)
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
3
2
1 Raising awareness
Country/regional level analysis
Design services
Planning transfer of resources
Preparing & moving children
Preparing & moving staff
Logistics
Monitoring & evaluation
Managing the process
Analysis at institution level
Croatia Campaign for Foster care and Adption
Institutions transformed into polyclinics of non residential services for children and mother & baby units
BABY BOX (In 11 EU Countries)
Causes of child abandonment*
Teenage parenting & mother’s lack of formal educationSocial or cultural stigma of single parenthoodPsychiatric disorders, alcohol or drug abusePoverty or financial hardshipPoor housing & homelessnessNot ready to have a child & being too late to have an abortion. Also, restricted access to abortionFew family planning & specialist services in local communities (e.g., to visit pregnant mothers)Poor preparation for birth & traditional practices of perinatal care that interfere with mother to child attachmentChildren with disabilities & lack of support services (e.g., day care while parents are at work)
*Latest EU Daphne project 2010 to 2012
Mother-Baby Units to replace Baby Homes No child under three in residential care without a mother
Day care facilities for children with and without disabilities
Ethnic minority foster care – a way forward that reduces unemployment in this group
Children without parents placed in small surrogate family units in the community
Continuity of care staff acting in pairs as parents/relatives on regular shifts (eg: day/night)
Care staff trained in one to one interaction and promoting attachment
Maximum 5 or 6 children per foster/surrogate family up to 2 with disabilities